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Graham Oddie

University of Colorado, Boulder
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    98
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 More details
  • University of Colorado, Boulder
    Department of Philosophy
    Professor
Homepage
Boulder, Colorado, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Metaphysics
Value Theory
Philosophy of Probability
Meta-Ethics
Areas of Interest
Epistemology
Metaphysics
Aesthetics
Meta-Ethics
Normative Ethics
Philosophy of Probability
1 more
  • All publications (98)
  •  3
    Verisimilitude and distance in logical space
    Acta Philosophica Fennica 30 227-43. 1978.
    VerisimilitudePropositions as Sets of Worlds
  •  214
    The content, consequence and likeness approaches to verisimilitude: compatibility, trivialization, and underdetermination
    Synthese 190 (9): 1647-1687. 2013.
    Theories of verisimilitude have routinely been classified into two rival camps—the content approach and the likeness approach—and these appear to be motivated by very different sets of data and principles. The question thus naturally arises as to whether these approaches can be fruitfully combined. Recently Zwart and Franssen (Synthese 158(1):75–92, 2007) have offered precise analyses of the content and likeness approaches, and shown that given these analyses any attempt to meld content and like…Read more
    Theories of verisimilitude have routinely been classified into two rival camps—the content approach and the likeness approach—and these appear to be motivated by very different sets of data and principles. The question thus naturally arises as to whether these approaches can be fruitfully combined. Recently Zwart and Franssen (Synthese 158(1):75–92, 2007) have offered precise analyses of the content and likeness approaches, and shown that given these analyses any attempt to meld content and likeness orderings violates some basic desiderata. Unfortunately their characterizations of the approaches do not embrace the paradigm examples of those approaches. I offer somewhat different characterizations of these two approaches, as well as of the consequence approach (Schurz and Weingartner (Synthese 172(3):415–436, 2010) which happily embrace their respective paradigms. Finally I prove that the three approaches are indeed compatible, but only just, and that the cost of combining them is too high. Any account which combines the strictures of what I call the strong likeness approach with the demands of either the content or the consequence approach suffers from precisely the same defect as Popper’s—namely, it entails the trivialization of truthlikeness. The downside of eschewing the strong likeness constraints and embracing the content constraints alone is the underdetermination of the concept of truthlikeness
    VerisimilitudeUnderdetermination of Theory by Data, MiscTheoretical Virtues, Misc
  •  150
    Reviews (review)
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 38 (2): 272-276. 1987.
    Scientific ProgressScientific TruthVerisimilitude
  •  5
    Truthlikeness and Value
    In Pihlstrom S. (ed.), Approaching Truth: Essays in Honour of Ilkka Niiniluoto, College Publications. pp. 225-40. 2008.
    VerisimilitudeScience and Values
  •  285
    Harmony, purity, truth
    Mind 103 (412): 451-472. 1994.
    David Lewis has argued against the thesis he calls "Desire as Belief", claiming it is incompatible with the fundamentals of evidential decision theory. I show that the argument is unsound, and demonstrate that a version of desire as belief is compatible with a version of causal decision theory.
    Moral Realism and IrrealismDesire as BeliefDecision-Theoretic Puzzles, MiscDavid Lewis
  • Metaphysics
    In A. Haddock & J. A. Dupré (eds.), Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Macmillan. 2006.
  •  267
    An objectivist's guide to subjective value
    with Peter Menzies
    Ethics 102 (3): 512-533. 1992.
    Ethics
  • A decision theoretic argument against human embryo experimentation
    In M. Fricke (ed.), Essays in honor of Bob Durrant, University of Otago Press. pp. 111-27. 1986.
    Ethics
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